It's hard to believe, but the career of Ric Flair is coming to an end.

Whether WrestleMania 24 proves to be his last match as a full-time wrestler or not, the Nature Boy will be bowing out of the ring shortly. Whether you loved
him or hated him, you cannot deny that "Naitch" was one of the all-time best.

So, with that in mind, the SLAM! Wrestling crew decided to walk backward down that aisle
and reflect on both personal moments with Flair and his greatest times in the
ring. Here's what we had to say. Whoo!

Bob KapurMy favourite Flair moment was at a house show in Toronto during his first
WWF/WWE run. I met him outside before the show, and learning that I had third
row seats, he said he'd look for me during his match. At one point, he was setting
up Randy Savage for the Figure Four, saw me, pointed and said, "whooo!
This is for you, daddy!" He always had the ability to make me mark out,
even to this day.

Brian Elliot
To decide upon merely one moment from the career of one of the best all-round
wrestlers of all-time, is quite the task for any journalist. Here, it is nigh
on heresy for me to look past Flair's Clash of the Champions epic with Ricky
Steamboat, or his magnificent performance at the 1992 Royal Rumble.
But in recent years, where wrestling promos have become a lost art, I will never forget Flair's return to WCW on 14th September 1998. Away from the ring, he had been sued by the company for no-showing a Thunder event, even though
Flair believed he had been given permission to miss the show. When the differences were
eventually worked out, the Four Horsemen were reformed, and after some typically
brilliant mic work from Arn Anderson, Flair received an incredible ovation from
the Greenville, South Carolina, crowd, before launching into his own tremendous
promo, acknowledging the fans' undying support, and then the appearance of Eric Bischoff, the man who, in real life, had pursued the original lawsuit.
To this day I can still say that, as a whole, the return of Flair is the greatest
television segment I have ever seen. Ric Flair, the "Nature Boy",
is irreplaceable."

Jon WaldmanNot having the NWA on TV meant that I missed out on the majority of Ric's
career, but his arrival into the WWF was huge, even for me, because his name
was well known through the Apter mags. When he arrived, I'll admit it - I hated
the guy, up until an appearance on WWF Superstars of Wrestling. I can't say
what episode it was or who he was facing, but Naitch, unlike certain top carders
(read: Hogan, Hulk) was wrestling in a match on the show usually dominated by
the Brooklyn Brawler, and for some reason, he was getting a babyface reaction
from the crowd. Years later I'd understand why fans loved him so much on that
odd Saturday morning, but it was that match, more than anything else that Flair
did in the WWF.

In the "living vicariously through others" file, I can remember
the excitement of both John Molinaro and Stephen Laroche at the Canoe offices
when they got Flair on the phone for interviews. We may be reporters, but we're
still fans. When I finally got to interview Flair in person, it was everything
I'd hoped and more. He talks to you, listens to your question and doesn't give
glib, rehearsed answers. The Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame: The Heels is
oodles better in part because of Flair. Thanks for the memories, 'Naitch.

Mark XaminBack in 1992 I was only nine years old, and I remember walking through the
playground during recess with my friend. He was going on about how great the
Royal Rumble was, and I was embarrassed to admit I didn't know who Ric Flair
was. I went out and rented the Coliseum Home Video release and was immediately
taken by him. Even as a kid I knew Flair was the best, I'd never seen anything
like him. He went on to make history in what was, in my opinion,the best Royal
Rumble of all time. Time sure flies.

Marty GoldsteinThe interview he did in the buildup to his cage match with Jimmy Garvin
over "the dream date" with Precious (1986 or '87 -- I have it on tape
somewhere here) where he went nuts necking with a mannequin, and then the bout
itself which was physical beyond belief. A mark tried to climb the cage to get
at Flair. Now that is heat.

Matt MackinderEven though he lost the NWA World title in the process, Ric Flair's match
with Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat at the Chi-Town Rumble back in early
1989 is as good a match from Flair you will ever see. The match had everything
a World title bout should have, even a clean finish. Even in defeat the "Nature
Boy" is still the best (and dirtiest) player in the game. Woooo!

Now it's your turn. What was your favourite Ric Flair moment in wrestling?
Email us with your thoughts, and we'll collect them for a SLAM! Readers Speak down the road.